286 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 
of others might be that occur in grassy fields. Mr. Druce rightly 
considers its claims for that county ‘‘ notestablished.”’ On comparing 
the fresh specimen sent with the Eng. Bot. plate, I noted that the 
Monmouthshire plant had much less red in the flowers ; they were 
of a lovely blue, slightly tinted or rather suffused with faint red. It 
in Hants.” Many other counties are put in square brackets in 
Top. Bot. ed. 2, 803.—Antuur. Benner. : 
[In the National Herbarium, besides a specimen from “ near 
Tring, Bucks,” collected by Mr. Druce in 1897, we have one 
collected by Mr. John Benbow in a ‘‘meadow at Colstrope, near 
Hambleden,” in the same county, in June, 1885. Mr. Bennett 
rightly criticizes the dull colouring of the original plate in English 
Botany, the drawing for which has hardly any indication of colour; 
but the colouring of the reproduction in ed. 3, in which the lower 
lip is of a uniform pale grey, is hardly surpassed in inaccuracy by 
any of the figures in that artistically ill-treated work.—Ep. 
OURN. ks 
Scarania inTeRMEDIA Hus. 1n Iretanp.—While botanizing in 
July, 1902, at Galtee More Mountain, in South Tipperary, i 
gathered a nice tuft having perfect colesules of the hepatic Scapanta 
intermedia Hus. It grew amongst S. undulata at 1800 ft., on sand- 
stone rocks to the south of Lough Professor Douin, 0 
Chartres, to whom I sent t¢ 
Though not hitherto recorded fr 
‘dly escape on. e plant w 
1847 by Miss Charlotte Wilson (not Wilkins as at first stated). 
_ Tsvcrivm Borrys.—I send you a plant of Teucrium Botrys. 1 
found it growing in profusion in an uncultivated field at God- 
mersham, near Wye, Kent.—W. H, Hammonp. 
M ATHAMANTICUM IN ARGYLE (p. 139).—I recorded this for 
1888, p. 368, and it is duly noted in 
Topogra al stany of Scotland for Argyle.— 
